adjustable – Ultra Golfing https://ultragolfing.com Golf news & updates Thu, 29 Jan 2026 06:41:05 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://ultragolfing.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/cropped-UG_Favicon-32x32.png adjustable – Ultra Golfing https://ultragolfing.com 32 32 Cobra OPTM hybrids deliver adjustable launch and tighter dispersion https://ultragolfing.com/cobra-optm-hybrids-deliver-adjustable-launch-and-tighter-dispersion/ https://ultragolfing.com/cobra-optm-hybrids-deliver-adjustable-launch-and-tighter-dispersion/#respond Thu, 29 Jan 2026 06:41:05 +0000 https://ultragolfing.com/cobra-optm-hybrids-deliver-adjustable-launch-and-tighter-dispersion/


Cobra’s OPTM hybrids use refined shaping, POI weighting and full adjustability to help golfers launch shots higher with more predictable distance.

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  • Cobra’s new OPTM hybrids are designed for golfers seeking consistent launch and tighter shot dispersion.
  • The clubs feature a larger profile and a variable-thickness face to improve performance on off-center hits.
  • An adjustable hosel offers 33 different loft and lie combinations for precise custom fitting.

Gear: Cobra OPTM hybrids

Price: $329 each with KBS PG Hybrid shaft and Lamkin SuperStroke Crossline grip

Specs: Stainless steel construction with variable-thickness face and 33-position adjustable hosel.

Available: Jan. 13 (pre-sale), Jan. 20 (in stores)

Who it’s for: Golfers who want a hybrid with a slightly larger profile that launches easily, flies into a predictable window and can be precisely fit for loft, lie and trajectory.

What you should know: The OPTM hybrids combine a fairway-wood-style hybrid shape with internal weighting and adjustability to help golfers tighten dispersion and produce more consistent shots.

The Deep Dive: Designing a hybrid today is less about replacing a long iron and more about managing ball flight. Launch, spin and directional control all matter more than raw distance, especially for clubs that are asked to perform from the tee, the fairway and the rough.

With the OPTM hybrids, Cobra focused on making ball flight easier to repeat. Compared with previous generations, the heads feature a slightly larger address profile and a shallower face height, changes designed to promote easier launch without sacrificing control. Those visual cues are paired with Adaptive POI weighting, which redistributes mass inside the head to reduce unwanted twisting on off-center strikes and help the clubhead rotate more naturally through impact.

The OPTM hybrids also use Cobra’s H.O.T. Face technology, a variable-thickness face design that creates multiple hot zones across the hitting area. By flexing more efficiently on off-center strikes, particularly low-on-the-face-hits, the design helps preserve ball speed and carry distance when contact isn’t perfect.

Like the rest of the OPTM metalwood family, the hybrids feature Cobra’s FutureFit33 adjustable hosel that offers 33 independent loft-and-lie combinations. That level of adjustability allows fitters to fine-tune trajectory, spin, and directional bias without changing shafts, making it easier to dial in proper gapping at the top of the set.

The OPTM hybrids are available in 3H (19 degrees), 4H (21 degrees), 5H (24 degrees), and 6H (28 degrees), paired with KBS PG Hybrid graphite shafts in multiple weights and flexes. Cobra also offers a women’s lineup that includes a 7H (31 degrees) option with lighter shafts designed to promote higher launch and easier speed generation.

As hybrids continue to replace long irons for a wide range of golfers, Cobra sees this category as a critical link between fairway woods and irons. The OPTM hybrids are built to deliver consistent launch windows, predictable distance, and tighter dispersion—traits that matter more than sheer ball speed when precision becomes the priority.

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PXG GEN8 irons with adjustable perimeter weighting and forged feel https://ultragolfing.com/pxg-gen8-irons-with-adjustable-perimeter-weighting-and-forged-feel/ https://ultragolfing.com/pxg-gen8-irons-with-adjustable-perimeter-weighting-and-forged-feel/#respond Tue, 20 Jan 2026 05:44:09 +0000 https://ultragolfing.com/pxg-gen8-irons-with-adjustable-perimeter-weighting-and-forged-feel/


PXG’s GEN8 irons rethink iron design with perimeter-based weighting, forged construction and three models built for distinct player types.

Gear: PXG GEN8 T, P, XP irons

Price: $229 per club (chrome), $249 per club (Xtreme Dark)

Specs: Hollow-body construction with forged 8620 carbon steel chassis and face, adjustable perimeter-based tungsten weights and internal polymer core.

Available: Jan. 15

Who it’s for: Better players looking for a compact, workable iron with modern ball speed (GEN8 T), golfers who want a balanced blend of forgiveness and control (GEN8 P), and players prioritizing distance, higher launch and maximum forgiveness (GEN8 XP).

What you should know: GEN8 marks a significant shift in PXG’s iron design philosophy, replacing center-loaded mass with adjustable perimeter weights that increase forgiveness and allows meaningful shot-shape tuning without changing the clubhead itself.

The Deep Dive: It has been 10 years since PXG brought out its first irons, the 0311, and tried to give the golf world something that many people didn’t think was possible—a true game-improvement club that enhanced distance and feel, yet looked like a better-player’s iron.

Today, PXG’s GEN8 irons build on a decade of refinement, but have the same mission.

Recently released PXG irons were designed with a large weight behind the center of gravity in the back of the head. That approach preserved CG location when weights were swapped to adjust the swing weight, but it limited gains in moment of inertia (MOI) and reduced perimeter weighting. Now, with GEN8, PXG split that mass and pushed it out to the heel and toe. Even in the neutral configuration, going with two weights instead of one creates a noticeable jump in forgiveness because the heads are more stable through impact on off-center hits.

More interesting, though, is what happens when the weights move. Shifting mass toward the heel or toe alters both CG location and the club’s resistance to face rotation around the shaft axis, subtly influencing how easily the face closes or stays open. And PXG’s testing showed these changes were not theoretical; players could feel the difference and launch monitor data confirmed measurable differences in face angle and shot pattern when the 10 grams of total mass that is split isn’t split into two 5-gram weights, but instead into a 4-gram and 6-gram or 3-gram and 7-gram.

That adjustability sits on top of a manufacturing process PXG loves to discuss. The GEN8 irons are fully forged using 8620 carbon steel, despite their complex internal geometry, using a five-step forging process allows PXG to create thin walls, deep cavities and internal channels that would normally require casting. It is a more expensive approach, but one PXG believes is essential to both performance and quality.

Internally, GEN8 continues PXG’s evolution away from energy-absorbing polymers. Earlier generations of the brand’s irons used softer materials primarily to improve sound and feel. Over time, PXG shifted toward a more resilient internal polymer called QuantumCore that is designed to support the face and return more energy to the ball. The result is a face that flexes efficiently without relying on excessive damping, helping maintain ball speed while still producing a solid, controlled feel.

The lineup within GEN8 is tiered.

  • The GEN8 T is compact, with minimal offset and a thinner top line, aimed at players who value precision and workability but still want modern ball speed.
  • The GEN8 P sits in the middle, blending a slightly larger profile with forgiveness that does not overwhelm the better player visually.
  • The GEN8 XP leans fully into distance and stability, with stronger lofts, wider soles and more offset to help golfers launch the ball high and keep speed on off-center strikes.

Taken as a whole, GEN8 feels less like a tweak and more like a platform shift for PXG. The brand is leaning into adjustability, manufacturing precision and energy management, while still offering distinct shapes and setups for very different types of golfers.

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PXG GEN8 irons bring adjustable weighting to a forged iron design https://ultragolfing.com/pxg-gen8-irons-bring-adjustable-weighting-to-a-forged-iron-design/ https://ultragolfing.com/pxg-gen8-irons-bring-adjustable-weighting-to-a-forged-iron-design/#respond Sun, 18 Jan 2026 17:42:37 +0000 https://ultragolfing.com/pxg-gen8-irons-bring-adjustable-weighting-to-a-forged-iron-design/


PXG’s GEN8 irons rethink iron design with perimeter-based weighting, forged construction and three models built for distinct player types.

Gear: PXG GEN8 T, P, XP irons

Price: TBD

Specs: Five-step forged body construction with deep internal cavities, flexible face, perimeter-based tungsten weighting system, internal polymer core and model-specific sole geometry

Available: TBD

Who it’s for: Better players looking for a compact, workable iron with modern ball speed (GEN8 T), golfers who want a balanced blend of forgiveness and control (GEN8 P), and players prioritizing distance, higher launch and maximum forgiveness (GEN8 XP).

What you should know: The GEN8 iron family marks a significant shift in the brand’s design philosophy, replacing center-loaded mass with adjustable perimeter weighting that increases forgiveness and allows meaningful shot-shape tuning without changing the clubhead itself.

The Deep Dive: There’s always been a reason adjustable drivers have become standard, and adjustable irons are unicorns. Drivers are big enough to house the adjustable mechanisms, and golfers over the last two decades have gotten used to tinkering with loft sleeves and movable weights. Irons, on the other hand, have traditionally been a place where you pick your head, pick your shaft, bend the loft and lie if needed, and call it a day.

Enter PXG with the new GEN8 series of irons. With one look at the back of GEN8 T, GEN8 P or GEN8 XP you will easily see that the Scottsdale, Arizona-based brand is bringing something new to the party.

In previously released irons like the GEN7, PXG irons placed a large weight in the middle of the back of each head. It helped lower the center of gravity (CG) and allowed players to test different swing weights during fitting sessions. With GEN8, PXG split that mass into two weights and pushed them outward, toward the heel and toe. Even in the neutral configuration, that change delivers a noticeable jump in forgiveness because the added max in the heel and toe makes the GEN8 irons more stable and less likely to twist on off-center strikes.

And to answer the question that is likely popping into many golfers’ minds right now, yes, PXG can put different weights in the ports to alter both CG location and the club’s resistance to face rotation. Most golfers will likely have the same amount of weight in the heel and toe, but adding extra weight to the toe should slow rotation for golfers who tend to shut the face too much and hook shots, while adding weight to the heel should encourage rotation and lead to fewer fanned shots to the right. PXG’s testing showed these changes were not theoretical. Players could feel them, and launch monitor data confirmed measurable differences in face angle and shot pattern.

That adjustability sits atop a manufacturing process that PXG is eager to continue using. The GEN8 irons are fully forged in a five-step process that allows PXG to create thin walls, deep cavities and internal channels that would typically require casting, while preserving the consistency of a forged head. It is a more expensive approach, but one PXG believes is essential to both performance and perceived quality.

Earlier PXG irons used softer internal polymers to improve sound and feel. Over time, PXG has shifted toward a more resilient internal polymer material that supports the face and returns energy to the ball more efficiently. The company calls it QuantumCOR, and adding it inside the head of each GEN8 iron results in a face that flexes efficiently and reduces excessive vibrations while still producing a solid, controlled feel.

The lineup within the GEN8 family mimics what we have seen in recent years from PXG:

  • The GEN8 T is compact, with minimal offset and a thinner top line, aimed at players who value precision and workability but still want modern ball speed.
  • The GEN8 P sits in the middle, blending a slightly larger profile with forgiveness that does not overwhelm the better player visually.
  • The GEN8 XP leans fully into distance and stability, with stronger lofts, wider soles and more offset to help golfers launch the ball high and keep speed on off-center strikes.

Taken as a whole, GEN8 feels less like a tweak and more like a platform shift. It is PXG leaning into adjustability, manufacturing precision and energy management, while still offering distinct shapes and setups for very different types of golfers.

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